Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1039508
Varalica uzvraća pogled: rekonceptualizacija drugog u djelima suvremenog indijanskog umjetnika Jamesa Lune
Varalica uzvraća pogled: rekonceptualizacija drugog u djelima suvremenog indijanskog umjetnika Jamesa Lune // Ars (Cetinje), 5 (2019), 5, 16 (međunarodna recenzija, članak, znanstveni)
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Naslov
Varalica uzvraća pogled: rekonceptualizacija drugog u djelima suvremenog indijanskog umjetnika Jamesa Lune
(The Trickster Returns the Gaze: Reconceptualizing the Other in the Work of Contemporary Native American Artist James Luna)
Autori
Runtić, Sanja ; Poljak Rehlicki, Jasna
Izvornik
Ars (Cetinje) (0352-6739) 5
(2019);
5, 16
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u časopisima, članak, znanstveni
Ključne riječi
James Luna, mimikrija, Bahtin, humor, Vizenor, varalica, dekolonizacija
(James Luna, mimicry, Bakhtin, humor, Vizenor, trickster, decolonization)
Sažetak
The paper analyzes the use of humor in the work of Luiseño artist James Luna. Utilizing the media of performance, photography and installation, using himself as the object of representation, Luna has created a recognizable artistic style that addresses the complex issues of American Indian identity and representation. His installations The End of the Frail (1990-91) and The Artifact Piece (1987, 1990) both point at the constructed nature of Native identity. Whereas the former employs satire, self-stereotyping, parody and humor to expose and confront the colonial myths, distorted attitudes and pictographic representations of Native Americans, the latter addresses the issues of Native absence and invisibility in the dominant culture. Representing himself as an artifact to provoke laughter, shock and discomfort, in The Artifact Piece Luna clearly disclosed the relationship between Western institutions of knowledge and the culture of the spectacle. Both installations draw attention to the tie between imperialism and material forms of production and representation, indicating the still ongoing institutional investment in Native allegorization through commodification and scientific practices, the fact that even today Native American identity is compromised by the colonial discourse and its disciplinary practices and imagination. Using Bhabha's concepts of mimicry and hybridity, Bakhtin's theory of humor and Vizenor's trickster holotrope, our analysis discusses the subversive potential of Luna's auto-ethnographic project, its potential to deconstruct the meta-narratives of Otherness and colonization, and create new spaces for social dialogue and cultural survival.
Izvorni jezik
Hrvatski
Znanstvena područja
Filologija, Interdisciplinarne humanističke znanosti, Primijenjena umjetnost, Interdisciplinarno umjetničko polje